Pro football is heading to China

As the NFL expands to east to London, another brand of football is going west. To the Far East.

According to ChinaDaily.com (via SportsBusiness Daily), ESPN’s Ron Jaworski is helping the Arena Football League establish a presence in China.

“We’re coming to a country that doesn’t know much about what American football is, but it’s a country that loves sports,” Jaworski said. “They will pick up on football very quickly. I watched the Olympics, and watched those weightlifters and I think, I’d like to have some of those guys on my offensive line.”

It won’t be an expansion of the Arena League. It’ll be a six-team, 10-game arrangement launching in October 2014. AFL coaches and trainers will travel to China to help teach the sport to squads that will contain a mixture of Chinese and American players at first. The goal will be to eventually have an all-Chinese league.

The NFL has toyed in the past with the possibility of playing preseason games in China. A contest featuring the Patriots was planned, but eventually scrapped.

Jaworski isn’t concerned that fans in China aren’t up to speed on the nuances of the game. “There are plenty of Americans who don’t understand football, but they still go to the games,” Jaworski said, not mentioning whether he was referring to any of his Bristol colleagues.

I have been a season ticket holder for the Tampa Bay Storm for awhile. AFL is not perfect, but if you have no Football March-July it sure fills the void somewhat. Derrick Brooks is the President for the Storm and gives credit to the game.

The games are fast and the players play hard, and most of them are guys that have jobs within the community and are very fan friendly.